Waitsfield officials are in Superior Court this week for one of the final rounds of activity on the town’s condemnation of land for its municipal water project.

The town spent Monday and part of Tuesday laying out the case for the necessity of the town’s municipal water project, including the location of the town’s well and wellhead protection zone on land owned by Virginia Houston.

Houston and her attorney and witnesses spent those days laying out the case against the project and against the condemnation. In January, the town voted to proceed with the condemnation after announcing the month before that it would continue to negotiate in hopes of settling without condemnation.

The town was successful in settling with one of the two landowners involved but has been unable to reach an agreement with Houston.

Judge Geoffrey Crawford will accept proposed findings from both sides and is expected to issue a decision on the necessity ruling by the end of the month. If the judge decides in the town’s favor, a separate procedure will deal with the issue of damages due to Houston for the condemnation.

Waitsfield’s municipal water project is currently under construction. It will use water from a well drilled off Reed Road. That land abuts Houston’s property on that road. Since December, the town has been in negotiations with Houston to purchase 1.22 acres of land around the well. Waitsfield drilled the well in 2006 based on its assumption that Reed Road was a town road.

Last November, a Superior Court judge ruled that the town had not sufficiently demonstrated that the road was a town road. That ruling came after the town had secured funding, awarded contracts and begun work on the $7.5 million municipal project. Voters approved the project in 2008. The project will supply water to Waitsfield, Irasville, Old County Road and Tremblay Road.

At the end of March, the town completed the condemnation process and mailed Houston a check for $41,137 which remains uncashed, according to her attorney Paul Gillies. The town is condemning the land as authorized by statute 19 V. S. A. Chapter 7 and 24 V. S. A Chapter 89.